The Windsors are obsessed with teddy bears. Prince Andrew, officially the worst Windsor after being accused of having sex with a minor, has 72 of them.
Unlike his brother’s disturbing teddy love, Britain's king-in-waiting's bear obsession brings images of his childhood. “Charles’s childhood teddy bear, which is still patched whenever necessary by the Prince’s former nanny Mabel Anderson…, went everywhere with him,” writes Tina Brown about the Prince of Wales in The Palace Papers: Inside the House of Windsor, the Truth and the Turmoil, the most delightful book of the season.
Brexit forgotten, Megxit not so much, and with the Platinum Jubilee celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II over, realisation looms large that the end of her reign is near. “It is actually a very perilous time for the monarchy,” says Brown, in a Zoom interview. “Seventy years, she has been there. Now we are at a moment when things are very fragile, but we will not have her to keep calm and carry on.”
Coming 15 years after her Diana Chronicles, a sensitive portrayal of the beloved princess, The Palace Papers is deeply researched and filled with delicious anecdotes. Brown is observant, wry and riveting. She breaks new ground even in a scandal that has littered papers across the world. “The Oprah interview [with Prince Harry's wife, Meghan Markle] made it very hard to patch things up with his family,” says Brown.
With a $20-million tell-all memoir by Harry on the cards, there is more hurt in store for the family. “I don't see how the family can really deal with yet another round of toxic revelations from Harry... They are very anxious about it,” says Brown.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 31, 2022-Ausgabe von THE WEEK India.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 31, 2022-Ausgabe von THE WEEK India.
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Angry, Young America
Campus protests against the Gaza war continue to linger as students demand a realignment of US ties with Israel
We need to engage more with communities
Designer Aratrik Dev Varman of the label Tilla has long been a lover of history. One could comfortably call him part-aesthete, part-archeologist, for his clothes dip into vintage styles of the Kutch, Sindh, Balochistan and Afghanistan, bringing alive antique styles and crafts. Tilla, the store and atelier, are situated on a tree-lined avenue in Ahmedabad.
The great luxury slowdown
A year or so ago, if anyone had told me that Tommy Hilfiger would have stolen the show at New York’s Met Gala, I would have laughed. But it seems the end of giant luxury labels is upon us even before we expected it. The American ready-to-wear designer Tommy Hilfiger seems to have created the maximum media buzz at the 2024 Met Gala, according to several data analytics firms.
RAP BRINGS RAPTURE
How indie artistes, especially hip-hoppers, are driving the phenomenal rise of Malayalam music
Employability issues are a narrative created by the corporate world
Prof Yogesh Singh is the 23rd vice chancellor of the century-old University of Delhi (DU). An engineer with a PhD in computer engineering, Singh has an impressive track record of teaching, innovation and research in the area of software engineering. He has more than 250 publications and his book, Software Testing, published by the Cambridge University Press, is well-received internationally. In an interview with THE WEEK, Singh talks about trends in higher education in India, the challenges faced by big universities, and how to make higher education more interesting. Asked about the perception that Indian graduates are “not employable”, he reacts strongly, and emphasises the difference between training and higher education. Edited excerpts:
SERVING WITH DISTINCTION
Conceived as a university like no other, Jawaharlal Nehru University became India's best. Here is how
Mandela Effect and Liar's Dividend
The complex tapestry of AI's impact on society
The other Sabyasachi
I am Sabyasachi Mukherjee, not to be confused with my namesake, the celebrated fashion couturier, declared the venerated director-general of Mumbai’s pride, George Wittet’s Indo-Saracenic jewel, the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya, formerly known as the Prince of Wales Museum.
THE MANGO HUNTERS
'Naadan Maavukal' started out as a Facebook group, but what it does offline has helped conserve many indigenous varieties of mangoes
BJP LEADERS, TOO, HAVE HAD ENOUGH
Farmers’ protest has taken the centre stage in Haryana, which goes to the polls on May 25. Former Haryana chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda is confident that the Congress, which has been out of power for 10 years, will regain its hold on the state. “People who voted for the BJP are disappointed today. It is clear that they want change,” he told THE WEEK.